I'm a consultant and a flash developer, with former careers in graphic design, web strategy, and music production. My goal is to create better experiences through code, design, and talking about the business value of good user experiences.

Earlier today I was leafing through Computer Arts in a Tallinn bookstore, and stumbled upon an article called Patrons of design. The idea was roughly that now (lucky) creatives are sponsored by corporations, somewhat in the same way as wealthy individuals were patrons of fine artists in the good old days (of which I know nothing).

On the ferry home from Tallinn I killed time reading Directions magazine by Design Hotels, and an article touched on dadaism, which was considered an anti-art movement:

For everything that art stood for, Dada was to represent the opposite. Where art was concerned with traditional aesthetics, Dada ignored aesthetics.

Made me think about my relationship to art (again). I would love to do generative art (and be paid for it). So… For me, art is works that fulfill the following criteria:

The works are finished

The works are created for the sake of creating

The works are enjoyed by many

The price paid for the works is in no proportion to their material value

All of these criteria are optional. Music especially is a difficult form of art to match with these criteria. Have I lost it with this list? ;)

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Hehe, I’ll expand my original (quite incomplete) thought a bit further. And it is to be noted, that the points I listed cannot be argued for alone… But:

I think “the best” art comes from pure creation; not for enjoying oneself, not for fun, not for pleasing others, not for money or other material benefits, but creating for the sake of creating itself. If you wanted to be poetic, you could even say the art gets created through you.

And yes, I explicitly want to define art as something enjoyable. I find most art boring or repulsive, and my dada-sympathy-anti-art-statement is to rule them out of the sphere of art. ;) Also, without spectators, how would you know if the art is enjoyable?

Art doesn’t need to be paid for, that’s true. This could be more a play on words than anything, but a price of zero is most likely in no proportion to the value of an art piece.

I have a problem with art being a tool for shaking emotion out of people, probably mostly because I generally do not like repulsive art. And that’s the kind of emotional response artists seem to be interested in.

I also don’t like the commercial vs. art mindset. I don’t have a problem with corporations paying “artists” for creating enjoyable experiences. So does that make me anti-art? (I want to be! ;)